Way v. Berks County Board of Assessment Appeals

990 A.2d 1191, 2010 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 112, 2010 WL 744234
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 5, 2010
Docket1476 C.D. 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 990 A.2d 1191 (Way v. Berks County Board of Assessment Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Way v. Berks County Board of Assessment Appeals, 990 A.2d 1191, 2010 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 112, 2010 WL 744234 (Pa. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge PELLEGRINI.

Richard F. Way (Taxpayer) appeals from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County (trial court) denying Taxpayer’s appeal from the decision of the Berks County Board of Assessment Appeals (Board) denying his application to have his land assessed pursuant to the Pennsylvania Farmland and Forest Land Assessment Act of 1974, commonly known as the Clean and Green Act, 72 P.S. §§ 5490.1-5490.13. 1

Taxpayer owns land in Lenhartsville, Berks County, that has a gross acreage of 10.019 and a net acreage of 9.836. The two figures differ because the gross acreage includes land located on a public road. The land is divided between Taxpayer’s home, three agricultural sections totaling *1193 approximately five-and-a-half acres, and a wooded area totaling less than one acre. The three agricultural sections are farmed by Marvin Adam (Farmer), a retired farmer who lives nearby. He grows corn, barley and soybeans for sale and hay for his personal use. Farmer does not pay Taxpayer for the right to farm his land; rather, Farmer receives the benefit of the crops, and Taxpayer receives the benefit of someone taking care of his land.

On April 17, 2008, Taxpayer filed an application with the Board seeking preferential use assessment under the Clean and Green Act on the grounds that he owned more than 10 acres and/or that his land had an anticipated gross income of over $2,000. 2 The Board denied Taxpayer’s application, and he appealed to the trial court.

The testimony addressed how the land was used and the value of the crops grown on it. Farmer testified that he plants the same amount of each crop each year, but that the price fluctuates. In 2008, he estimated the value of the corn he planted to be $900 at the time of trial, but that he had not sold it yet, and that it “could be” worth up to $1,800 by July, depending on the market price. He also sold approximately $210 worth of barley and $320 worth of soybeans. He further testified that he uses the hay he grows to feed his farm animals, but that if he sold it, he would receive approximately $600 to $700. Farmer made less money off the crops in 2007 due to low prices, but he made a similar amount in 2006 because even though the prices were down, he had a higher yield.

The trial court found in favor of the Board, holding that 10 acres is a bright-line threshold so the 9.836 net acres could not be rounded up, and that gross acreage could not be used as a basis for qualification for the Clean and Green Act because the land upon the public road is ineligible pursuant to 7 Pa.Code § 137b.2. 3 The trial court also held that Farmer could expect the sale of corn, barley and soybeans to total $1,430 per year ($900 for corn, $210 for barley and $320 for soybeans), and that the hay could not be counted *1194 because Farmer did not sell it and, therefore, received no income from it. As neither the 10 acre nor $2,000 threshold was met, Taxpayer did not qualify for preferential use assessment under the Clean and Green Act. This appeal followed, 4 where Taxpayer again argues that nothing in the Clean and Green Act authorizes the Board to use net acres rather than gross acres in computing the size of a tract, so all the land should be counted or that crops have to be sold to meet the $2,000 threshold.

As to what is the correct measure of acreage, neither the Act itself nor its regulations provide whether gross or net acres are to be used in calculating eligible land. However, Section 137b.2 defines “ineligible land” as “[l]and which is not used for any of the three eligible uses (agricultural use, agricultural reserve or forest reserve) and therefore cannot receive use value assessment.” 7 Pa.Code § 137b.24 provides, in relevant part, “ineligible land may not receive preferential assessment.”

Here, Taxpayer’s land consists of four types: land farmed by Farmer, his house and yard (farmstead land), a woodlot, and land over which runs a public road. The first three clearly fall under the definition of “agricultural use” and also make up the entirety of his 9.836 net acres of land. The public road solely accounts for the difference in size between Taxpayer’s 10.019 gross acres and his 9.836 net acres. 5 This land is not used for agriculture or forestry, nor is it part of the farmstead. Because a public road falls under the definition of ineligible land, it cannot be used in calculating whether Taxpayer qualifies for preferential use assessment under the Clean and Green Act. 6

Even if he is not entitled to a preferential use assessment because he does not have sufficient acreage, Taxpayer contends that he qualifies for preferential use assessment under the Clean and Green Act because he has an “anticipated yearly income” of at least $2,000. Whether Taxpayer meets this threshold depends on whether he can count the $600 to $700 value to Farmer of the hay he personally uses but never places on the market, and whether Farmer’s hope that the value of his corn may have risen from $900 to $1,800 by the time he sold it due to rising market prices is sufficient to allow use of the higher value. 7 These determinations hinge on the definitions of “income” and “anticipated income.”

As the trial court correctly noted, the Internal Revenue Regulations require a “sale” for a farmer using the cash meth *1195 od of accounting to have gross income. 8 Farmer never sold the hay he harvested from Taxpayer’s land. Rather, he testified that he used this home-grown hay to feed his farm animals rather than buying hay on the market. If he had to buy an equivalent amount of hay, it would have cost him $600-$700. Farmer’s use of the hay is exactly equivalent to a homeowner who has a backyard vegetable garden. Such a homeowner might grow vegetables that, if bought in the supermarket, would have cost him $100. This homeowner has no income from these vegetables and no obligation to estimate their value so that the government may tax them. On the other hand, if the homeowner had sold his vegetables at a farmer’s market, he would have had taxable income. Likewise, if Farmer had sold the hay he grew on Taxpayer’s land, he would have had taxable income, but he did not, making the estimated $600 to $700 value of the hay not “anticipated yearly income” necessary to satisfy the $2,000 threshold.

Likewise, Taxpayer cannot place a higher value on the corn based on what Farmer testified it “could be” worth several months after he testified if the market prices rose to a certain level. “Anticipated yearly income” is different from “hoped-for yearly income” or “possible yearly income.” 9 Anticipation entails an expectation, not a desire or a possibility. Farmer testified that there was a possibility that the corn would be worth $1,800 by the time he sold it, but at the time of his testimony, it was worth $900.

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Related

Herzog v. McKean County Board of Assessment Appeals
14 A.3d 193 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
990 A.2d 1191, 2010 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 112, 2010 WL 744234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/way-v-berks-county-board-of-assessment-appeals-pacommwct-2010.